The Temporal Relation Between Rates of Retinal Nerve Fiber Layer and Minimum Rim Width Changes in Glaucoma.
Higgins Bethany E, Yang Hongli, Gardiner Stuart K
AI Summary
This study found retinal nerve fiber layer thickness and minimum rim width change concurrently in glaucoma, with no significant time lag. This suggests both are valuable, but RNFLT may be better for early assessment.
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to determine whether OCT-derived rates of change in minimum rim width (MRW) are associated with and can potentially predict corresponding alterations in retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFLT) in people with glaucoma.
Methods
The rates of change between six-monthly visits were taken from 568 eyes of 278 participants in the P3 Study. Structural equation models (SEM) assessed whether one parameter was predicted by the concurrent or previous rate of the other parameter, after adjusting for its own rate in the previous time interval. Root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA, with 90% confidence intervals [CI]), Tucker Lewis index (TLI) and the comparative fit index (CFI) assessed goodness of fit.
Results
Models without a time lag provided a better fit for the data (RMSEA = 0.101 [CI, 0.089, 0.113]), compared to a model featuring a time lag in RNFLT (RMSEA = 0.114 [CI, 0.102, 0.126]) or MRW (RMSEA = 0.114 [CI, 0.102, 0.127]). The SEMs indicated that rates for both MRW and RNFLT were predicted by their own rate in the previous time interval and by the other measure's change in the concurrent time interval (P > 0.001 for all). No evidence of a clinically significant time lag for either parameter was determined.
Conclusions
MRW and RNFLT exhibit concurrent changes over time in patients with glaucoma, with no clinically significant time lag determined.
Translational relevance: RNFLT may be more useful than MRW in early glaucoma assessment because of its previously reported lower variability and reduced sensitivity to intraocular pressure changes.
MeSH Terms
Shields Classification
Key Concepts4
OCT-derived rates of change in minimum rim width (MRW) and retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFLT) exhibit concurrent changes over time in patients with glaucoma, with no clinically significant time lag determined.
Structural equation models (SEMs) indicated that rates for both minimum rim width (MRW) and retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFLT) were predicted by their own rate in the previous time interval and by the other measure's change in the concurrent time interval (P > 0.001 for all) in patients with glaucoma.
Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (RNFLT) may be more useful than minimum rim width (MRW) in early glaucoma assessment because of its previously reported lower variability and reduced sensitivity to intraocular pressure changes.
Models without a time lag provided a better fit for the data (RMSEA = 0.101 [CI, 0.089, 0.113]) when assessing the temporal relation between rates of retinal nerve fiber layer and minimum rim width changes in glaucoma, compared to a model featuring a time lag in RNFLT (RMSEA = 0.114 [CI, 0.102, 0.126]) or MRW (RMSEA = 0.114 [CI, 0.102, 0.127]).
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